F. Stella, Digital Philology and Quantitative Criticism of Medieval Literature

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Francesco Stella, Digital Philology and Quantitative Criticism of Medieval Literature. Unconventional Approaches to Medieval Latin Literature II, Turnhout, 2020.

Éditeur : Brepols
Collection : Utrecht Studies in Medieval Literacy, 49
XII-279 pages
ISBN : 978-2-503-58801-8
80 €


This is the first volume dedicated to the exploration and edition of Medieval Latin texts by quantitative and digital means.
Building on The Carolingian Revolution: Unconventional Approaches to Medieval Latin Literature I, this is the second of two volumes proposing ways of reading medieval Latin texts which, up to now, have had little or no attention within literary studies. This volume is founded on the belief that ‘the unprecedented empirical power of digital tools and archives offers a unique chance to rethink the categories of literary study' (F. Moretti).

The book's first section presents cases studies applying ‘quantitative' criticism based on the linguistic and stylistic use of frequency wordlists which, thanks to digital tools and to a larger literature, are becoming more easily accessible and more powerful. The chapters of this section lead the reader from an application of stylometry within a traditional critical exercise, via the structured use of frequency indexing as a warning light for cultural or stylistic phenomena undetectable to the naked eye, to more technical corpus analysis experiments based on linguistic evolution or authorship attribution. The second section explores the encoding problems the author has faced when working on the realisation of digital editing projects such as the Corpus Rhythmorum Musicum, the Archivio della Latinità Italiana del Medioevo (ALIM), Lexicon, and the Eurasian Latin Archive (ELA), and proposes reflections on the typology of digital philological editions.

Francesco Stella, member of the Academia Europaea, is professor of Medieval Latin Literature at the University of Siena and head of the Master program in Digital Edition. The author of essays and monographs on Carolingian literature, Biblical poetry, and 12-13th century epistolography, he coordinates some of the first research projects on digital philology of medieval Latin texts, and directs the series Scrittori latini dell'Europa medievale and Hagiographica Coreana.

Table of Contents

The Mechanic Reader: Instead of an Introduction

Quantitative Criticism

Chapter 1. Venantius Fortunatus in Medieval Latin Poetry

Chapter 2. The Representations of the Book in Carolingian and Ottonian Poetic Texts: The Birth of Paratextual Poetry

Chapter 3. Europe's Name is Europa: ‘Europe' and ‘European' in Early Medieval Latin Texts

Chapter 4. The Landscape as a Memory Construction in the Latin Petrarch

Chapter 5. Generic Constants and Chronological Variations in Statistical Linguistics on Latin Epistolography

Chapter 6. Statistical Indicators of Proximity to the Early Romance Languages: Experimental Applications to Early Medieval Rhythmic Poetry

Chapter 7. Computer Analysis of the Lexicon and Identification of the Authors in the Epistolae duorum amantium (Twelfth Century)

Digital Philology

Chapter 8. Encoding Issues in Philological Digital Editions

Chapter 9. Digital Philology, Medieval Texts, and the Corpus Rhythmorum Musicum, a Digital Edition of Music and Poems

Bibliography

Indices

 

 

Source : Brepols